Internet-Draft R. Housley
Intended status: Standards Track Vigil Security
Expires: 11 November2 December 2017 11 May2 June 2017
Use of the Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman Key Agreement Algorithm
with X25519 and X448 in the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)
<draft-ietf-curdle-cms-ecdh-new-curves-07.txt><draft-ietf-curdle-cms-ecdh-new-curves-08.txt>
Abstract
This document describes the conventions for using Elliptic Curve
Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key agreement algorithm using curve25519 and
curve448 in the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS).
Status of This Memo
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This Internet-Draft will expire on 11 November2 December 2017.
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1. Introduction
This document describes the conventions for using Elliptic Curve
Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key agreement using curve25519 and curve448
[CURVES] in the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) [CMS]. Key
agreement is supported in three CMS content types: the enveloped-data
content type [CMS], authenticated-data content type [CMS], and the
authenticated-enveloped-data content type [AUTHENV].
The conventions for using some Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC)
algorithms in CMS are described in [CMSECC]. These conventions cover
the use of ECDH with some curves other than curve25519 and curve448
[CURVES]. Those other curves are not deprecated.
Using curve25519 with Diffie-Hellman key agreement is referred to as
X25519. Using curve448 with Diffie-Hellman key agreement is referred
to as X448.
1.1. Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [STDWORDS].
1.2. ASN.1
CMS values are generated using ASN.1 [X680], which uses the Basic
Encoding Rules (BER) and the Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER)
[X690].
2. Key Agreement
In 1976, Diffie and Hellman described a means for two parties to
agree upon a shared secret value in manner that prevents
eavesdroppers from learning the shared secret value [DH1976]. This
secret may then be converted into pairwise symmetric keying material
for use with other cryptographic algorithms. Over the years, many
variants of this fundamental technique have been developed. This
document describes the conventions for using Ephemeral-Static
Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key agreement using X25519 and
X448 [CURVES].
The originator MUST use an ephemeral public/private key pair that is
generated on the same elliptic curve as the public key of the
recipient. The ephemeral key pair MUST be used for a single CMS
protected content type, and then it MUST be discarded. The
originator obtains the recipient's static public key from the
recipient's certificate [PROFILE].
X25519 is described in Section 6.1 of [CURVES], and X448 is described
in Section 6.2 of [CURVES]. Conforming implementations MUST check
whether the computed Diffie-Hellman shared secret is the all-zero
value, and abort if so, as described in Section 6 of [CURVES]. If an
alternative implementation of these elliptic curves to that
documented in Section 6 of [CURVES] is employed, then the additional
checks specified in Section 7 of [CURVES] SHOULD be performed.
In [CURVES], the shared secret value that is produced by ECDH is
called K. (In some other specifications, the shared secret value is
called Z.) A key derivation function (KDF) is used to produce a
pairwise key-encryption key (KEK) from the shared secret value (K),
the length of the key-encryption key, and the DER-encoded ECC-CMS-
SharedInfo structure [CMSECC].
The ECC-CMS-SharedInfo definition from [CMSECC] is repeated here for
convenience.
ECC-CMS-SharedInfo ::= SEQUENCE {
keyInfo AlgorithmIdentifier,
entityUInfo [0] EXPLICIT OCTET STRING OPTIONAL,
suppPubInfo [2] EXPLICIT OCTET STRING }
The ECC-CMS-SharedInfo keyInfo field contains the object identifier
of the key-encryption algorithm and associated parameters. This
algorithm will be used to wrap the content-encryption key. For
example, the AES Key Wrap algorithm [AESKW] does not need parameters,
so the algorithm identifier parameters are absent.
The ECC-CMS-SharedInfo entityUInfo field optionally contains
additional keying material supplied by the sending agent. Note that
[CMS] requires implementations to accept a KeyAgreeRecipientInfo
SEQUENCE that includes the ukm field. If the ukm field is present,
the ukm is placed in the entityUInfo field. By including the ukm, a
different key-encryption key is generated even when the originator
ephemeral private key is improperly used more than once. Therefore,
if the ukm field is present, it MUST be selected in a manner that
provides with very high probability a unique value; however, there is
no security benefit to using a ukm value that is longer than the key-
encryption key that will be produced by the KDF.
The ECC-CMS-SharedInfo suppPubInfo field contains the length of the
generated key-encryption key, in bits, represented as a 32-bit number
in network byte order. For example, the key length for AES-256 [AES]
would be 0x00000100.
2.1. ANSI-X9.63-KDF
The ANSI-X9.63-KDF key derivation function is a simple construct
based on a one-way hash function described in ANSAmerican National
Standard X9.63 [X963]. This KDF is also described in Section 3.6.1
of [SEC1].
Three values are concatenated to produce the input string to the KDF:
1. The shared secret value generated by ECDH, K.
2. The iteration counter, starting with one, as described below.
3. The DER-encoded ECC-CMS-SharedInfo structure.
To generate a key-encryption key (KEK), the KDF generates one or more
KM blocks, with the counter starting at 0x00000001, and incrementing
the counter for each subsequent KM block until enough material has
been generated. The 32-bit counter is represented in network byte
order. The KM blocks are concatenated left to right, and then the
leftmost portion of the result is used as the pairwise key-encryption
key, KEK:
KM(i) = Hash(K || INT32(counter=i) || DER(ECC-CMS-SharedInfo))
KEK = KM(counter=1) || KM(counter=2) ...
2.2. HKDF
The HMAC-based Extract-and-Expand Key Derivation Function (HKDF) is a
robust construct based on a one-way hash function described in RFC
5869 [HKDF]. HKDF is comprised of two steps: HKDF-Extract followed
by HKDF-Expand.
Three values are used as inputs to the HKDF:
1. The shared secret value generated by ECDH, K.
2. The length in octets of the keying data to be generated.
3. The DER-encoded ECC-CMS-SharedInfo structure.
The ECC-CMS-SharedInfo structure optionally includes the ukm. If the
ukm is present, the ukm is also used as the HKDF salt. HKDF uses an
appropriate number of zero octets when no salt is provided.
The length of the generated key-encryption key is used two places,
once in bits, and once in octets. The ECC-CMS-SharedInfo structure
includes the length of the generated key-encryption key in bits. The
HKDF-Expand function takes an argument for the length of the
generated key-encryption key in octets.
In summary, to produce the pairwise key-encryption key, KEK:
if ukm is provided, then salt = ukm, else salt is not provided
PRK = HKDF-Extract(salt, K)
KEK = HKDF-Expand(PRK, DER(ECC-CMS-SharedInfo), SizeInOctets(KEK))
3. Enveloped-data Conventions
The CMS enveloped-data content type [CMS] consists of an encrypted
content and wrapped content-encryption keys for one or more
recipients. The ECDH key agreement algorithm is used to generate a
pairwise key-encryption key between the originator and a particular
recipient. Then, the key-encryption key is used to wrap the content-
encryption key for that recipient. When there is more than one
recipient, the same content-encryption key MUST be wrapped for each
of them.
A compliant implementation MUST meet the requirements for
constructing an enveloped-data content type in Section 6 of [CMS].
A content-encryption key MUST be randomly generated for each instance
of an enveloped-data content type. The content-encryption key is
used to encrypt the content.
3.1. EnvelopedData Fields
The enveloped-data content type is ASN.1 encoded using the
EnvelopedData syntax. The fields of the EnvelopedData syntax MUST be
populated as described in Section 6 of [CMS]. The RecipientInfo
choice is described in Section 6.2 of [CMS], and repeated here for
convenience.
RecipientInfo ::= CHOICE {
ktri KeyTransRecipientInfo,
kari [1] KeyAgreeRecipientInfo,
kekri [2] KEKRecipientInfo,
pwri [3] PasswordRecipientinfo,
ori [4] OtherRecipientInfo }
For the recipients that use X25519 or X448 the RecipientInfo kari
choice MUST be used.
3.2. KeyAgreeRecipientInfo Fields
The fields of the KeyAgreeRecipientInfo syntax MUST be populated as
described in this section when X25519 or X448 is employed for one or
more recipients.
The KeyAgreeRecipientInfo version MUST be 3.
The KeyAgreeRecipientInfo originator provides three alternatives for
identifying the originator's public key, and the originatorKey
alternative MUST be used. The originatorKey MUST contain an
ephemeral key for the originator. The originatorKey algorithm field
MUST contain the id-X25519 or the id-X448 object identifier. The
originator's ephemeral public key MUST be encoded as an OCTET STRING.
The object identifiers for X25519 and X448 have been assigned in
[ID.curdle-pkix]. They are repeated below for convenience.
When using X25519, the public key contains exactly 32 octets, and the
id-X25519 object identifier is used:
id-X25519 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { 1 3 101 110 }
When using X448, the public key contains exactly 56 octets, and the
id-X448 object identifier is used:
id-X448 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { 1 3 101 111 }
KeyAgreeRecipientInfo ukm is optional. The processing of the ukm
with The ANSI-X9.63-KDF key derivation function is described in
Section 2.1, and the processing of the ukm with the HKDF key
derivation function is described in Section 2.2.
KeyAgreeRecipientInfo keyEncryptionAlgorithm MUST contain the object
identifier of the key-encryption algorithm that will be used to wrap
the content-encryption key. The conventions for using AES-128,
AES-192, and AES-256 in the key wrap mode are specified in [CMSAES].
KeyAgreeRecipientInfo recipientEncryptedKeys includes a recipient
identifier and encrypted key for one or more recipients. The
RecipientEncryptedKey KeyAgreeRecipientIdentifier MUST contain either
the issuerAndSerialNumber identifying the recipient's certificate or
the RecipientKeyIdentifier containing the subject key identifier from
the recipient's certificate. In both cases, the recipient's
certificate contains the recipient's static X25519 or X448 public
key. RecipientEncryptedKey EncryptedKey MUST contain the content-
encryption key encrypted with the pairwise key-encryption key using
the algorithm specified by the KeyWrapAlgorithm.
4. Authenticated-data Conventions
The CMS authenticated-data content type [CMS] consists an
authenticated content, a message authentication code (MAC), and
encrypted authentication keys for one or more recipients. The ECDH
key agreement algorithm is used to generate a pairwise key-encryption
key between the originator and a particular recipient. Then, the
key-encryption key is used to wrap the authentication key for that
recipient. When there is more than one recipient, the same
authentication key MUST be wrapped for each of them.
A compliant implementation MUST meet the requirements for
constructing an authenticated-data content type in Section 9 of
[CMS].
A authentication key MUST be randomly generated for each instance of
an authenticated-data content type. The authentication key is used
to compute the MAC over the content.
4.1. AuthenticatedData Fields
The authenticated-data content type is ASN.1 encoded using the
AuthenticatedData syntax. The fields of the AuthenticatedData syntax
MUST be populated as described in [CMS]; for the recipients that use
X25519 or X448 the RecipientInfo kari choice MUST be used.
4.2. KeyAgreeRecipientInfo Fields
The fields of the KeyAgreeRecipientInfo syntax MUST be populated as
described in Section 3.2 of this document.
5. Authenticated-Enveloped-data Conventions
The CMS authenticated-enveloped-data content type [AUTHENV] consists
of an authenticated and encrypted content and encrypted content-
authenticated-encryption keys for one or more recipients. The ECDH
key agreement algorithm is used to generate a pairwise key-encryption
key between the originator and a particular recipient. Then, the
key-encryption key is used to wrap the content-authenticated-
encryption key for that recipient. When there is more than one
recipient, the same content-authenticated-encryption key MUST be
wrapped for each of them.
A compliant implementation MUST meet the requirements for
constructing an authenticated-data content type in Section 2 of
[AUTHENV].
A content-authenticated-encryption key MUST be randomly generated for
each instance of an authenticated-enveloped-data content type. The
content-authenticated-encryption key is used to authenticate and
encrypt the content.
5.1. AuthEnvelopedData Fields
The authenticated-enveloped-data content type is ASN.1 encoded using
the AuthEnvelopedData syntax. The fields of the AuthEnvelopedData
syntax MUST be populated as described in [AUTHENV]; for the
recipients that use X25519 or X448 the RecipientInfo kari choice MUST
be used.
5.2. KeyAgreeRecipientInfo Fields
The fields of the KeyAgreeRecipientInfo syntax MUST be populated as
described in Section 3.2 of this document.
6. Certificate Conventions
RFC 5280 [PROFILE] specifies the profile for using X.509 Certificates
in Internet applications. A recipient static public key is needed
for X25519 or X448, and the originator obtains that public key from
the recipient's certificate. The conventions for carrying X25519 and
X448 public keys are specified in [ID.curdle-pkix].
7. Key Agreement Algorithm Identifiers
The following object identifiers are assigned in [CMSECC] to indicate
ECDH with ANSI-X9.63-KDF using various one-way hash functions. These
are expected to be used as AlgorithmIdentifiers with a parameter that
specifies the key-encryption algorithm. These are repeated here for
convenience.
secg-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
iso(1) identified-organization(3) certicom(132) schemes(1) }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha256kdf-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
secg-scheme 11 1 }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha384kdf-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
secg-scheme 11 2 }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha512kdf-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
secg-scheme 11 3 }
The following object identifiers are assigned to indicate ECDH with
HKDF using various one-way hash functions. These are expected to be
used as AlgorithmIdentifiers with a parameter that specifies the
key-encryption algorithm.
smime-alg OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1)
pkcs-9(9) smime(16) alg(3) }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD1 }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD2 }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD3 }
8. SMIMECapabilities Attribute Conventions
A sending agent MAY announce to other agents that it supports ECDH
key agreement using the SMIMECapabilities signed attribute in a
signed message [SMIME] or a certificate [CERTCAP]. Following the
pattern established in [CMSECC], the SMIMECapabilities associated
with ECDH carries a DER-encoded object identifier that identifies
support for ECDH in conjunction with a particular KDF, and it
includes a parameter that names the key wrap algorithm.
The following SMIMECapabilities values (in hexidecimal) from [CMSECC]
might be of interest to implementations that support X25519 and X448:
ECDH with ANSI-X9.63-KDF using SHA-256; uses AES-128 key wrap:
30 15 06 06 2B 81 04 01 0B 01 30 0B 06 09 60 86 48 01 65 03 04
01 05
ECDH with ANSI-X9.63-KDF using SHA-384; uses AES-128 key wrap:
30 15 06 06 2B 81 04 01 0B 02 30 0B 06 09 60 86 48 01 65 03 04
01 05
ECDH with ANSI-X9.63-KDF using SHA-512; uses AES-128 key wrap:
30 15 06 06 2B 81 04 01 0B 03 30 0B 06 09 60 86 48 01 65 03 04
01 05
ECDH with ANSI-X9.63-KDF using SHA-256; uses AES-256 key wrap:
30 15 06 06 2B 81 04 01 0B 01 30 0B 06 09 60 86 48 01 65 03 04
01 2D
ECDH with ANSI-X9.63-KDF using SHA-384; uses AES-256 key wrap:
30 15 06 06 2B 81 04 01 0B 02 30 0B 06 09 60 86 48 01 65 03 04
01 2D
ECDH with ANSI-X9.63-KDF using SHA-512; uses AES-256 key wrap:
30 15 06 06 2B 81 04 01 0B 03 30 0B 06 09 60 86 48 01 65 03 04
01 2D
The following SMIMECapabilities values (in hexidecimal) based on the
algorithm identifiers in Section 7 of this document might be of
interest to implementations that support X25519 and X448:
ECDH with HKDF using SHA-256; uses AES-128 key wrap:
TBD
ECDH with HKDF using SHA-384; uses AES-128 key wrap:
TBD
ECDH with HKDF using SHA-512; uses AES-128 key wrap:
TBD
ECDH with HKDF using SHA-256; uses AES-256 key wrap:
TBD
ECDH with HKDF using SHA-384; uses AES-256 key wrap:
TBD
ECDH with HKDF using SHA-512; uses AES-256 key wrap:
TBD
9. Security Considerations
Please consult the security considerations of [CMS] for security
considerations related to the enveloped-data content type and the
authenticated-data content type.
Please consult the security considerations of [AUTHENV] for security
considerations related to the authenticated-enveloped-data content
type.
Please consult the security considerations of [CURVES] for security
considerations related to the use of X25519 and X448.
The originator uses an ephemeral public/private key pair that is
generated on the same elliptic curve as the public key of the
recipient. The ephemeral key pair is used for a single CMS protected
content type, and then it is discarded. If the originator wants to
be able to decrypt the content (for enveloped-data and authenticated-
enveloped-data) or check the authentication (for authenticated-data),
then the originator needs to treat themselves as a recipient.
As specified in [CMS], implementations MUST support processing of the
KeyAgreeRecipientInfo ukm field; this ensures that interoperability
is not a concern whether the ukm is present or absent. The ukm is
placed in the entityUInfo field of the ECC-CMS-SharedInfo structure.
When present, the ukm ensures that a different key-encryption key is
generated, even when the originator ephemeral private key is
improperly used more than once.
10. IANA Considerations
One object identifier for the ASN.1 module in the Appendix needs to
be assigned in the SMI Security for S/MIME Module Identifiers
(1.2.840.113549.1.9.16.0) [IANA-MOD] registry:
id-mod-cms-ecdh-alg-2017 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1)
pkcs-9(9) smime(16) mod(0) TBD0 }
Three object identifiers for the Key Agreement Algorithm Identifiers
in Sections 7 need to be assigned in the SMI Security for S/MIME
Algorithms (1.2.840.113549.1.9.16.3) [IANA-ALG] registry:
smime-alg OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1)
pkcs-9(9) smime(16) alg(3) }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD1 }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD2 }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD3 }
11. Normative References
[AUTHENV] Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)
Authenticated-Enveloped-Data Content Type", RFC 5083,
November 2007.
[CERTCAP] Santesson, S., "X.509 Certificate Extension for
Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (S/MIME)
Capabilities", RFC 4262, December 2005.
[CMS] Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)", RFC
5652, September 2009.
[CMSASN1] Hoffman, P., and J. Schaad, "New ASN.1 Modules for
Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) and S/MIME", RFC 5911,
June 2010.
[CMSECC] Turner, S., and D. Brown, "Use of Elliptic Curve
Cryptography (ECC) Algorithms in Cryptographic Message
Syntax (CMS)", RFC 5753, January 2010.
[CURVES] Langley, A., Hamburg, M., and S. Turner, "Elliptic Curves
for Security", RFC 7748, January 2016.
[HKDF] Krawczyk, H., and P. Eronen, "HMAC-based Extract-and-
Expand Key Derivation Function (HKDF)", RFC 5869, May
2010.
[ID.curdle-pkix]
Josefsson, S., and J. Schaad, "Algorithm Identifiers for
Ed25519, Ed25519ph, Ed448, Ed448ph, X25519 and X448 for
use in the Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure",
15 August 2016, Work-in-progress.
[PKIXALG] Bassham, L., Polk, W., and R. Housley, "Algorithms and
Identifiers for the Internet X.509 Public Key
Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
(CRL) Profile", RFC 3279, April 2002.
[PKIXECC] Turner, S., Brown, D., Yiu, K., Housley, R., and T. Polk,
"Elliptic Curve Cryptography Subject Public Key
Information", RFC 5480, March 2009.
[PROFILE] Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
(CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, May 2008.
[SEC1] Standards for Efficient Cryptography Group, "SEC 1:
Elliptic Curve Cryptography", version 2.0, May 2009,
<http://www.secg.org/sec1-v2.pdf>.
[SMIME] Ramsdell, B. and S. Turner, "Secure/Multipurpose Internet
Mail Extensions (S/MIME) Version 3.2 Message
Specification", RFC 5751, January 2010.
[STDWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[X680] ITU-T, "Information technology -- Abstract Syntax Notation
One (ASN.1): Specification of basic notation", ITU-T
Recommendation X.680, 2015.
[X690] ITU-T, "Information technology -- ASN.1 encoding rules:
Specification of Basic Encoding Rules (BER), Canonical
Encoding Rules (CER) and Distinguished Encoding Rules
(DER)", ITU-T Recommendation X.690, 2015.
12. Informative References
[AES] National Institute of Standards and Technology. FIPS Pub
197: Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). 26 November 2001.
[AESKW] Schaad, J., and R. Housley, "Advanced Encryption Standard
(AES) Key Wrap Algorithm", RFC 3394, September 2002.
[CMSAES] Schaad, J., "Use of the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)
Encryption Algorithm in Cryptographic Message Syntax
(CMS)", RFC 3565, July 2003.
[DH1976] Diffie, W., and M. E. Hellman, "New Directions in
Cryptography", IEEE Trans. on Info. Theory, Vol. IT-22,
Nov. 1976, pp. 644-654.
[IANA-ALG] https://www.iana.org/assignments/smi-numbers/
smi-numbers.xhtml#security-smime-3.
[IANA-MOD] https://www.iana.org/assignments/smi-numbers/
smi-numbers.xhtml#security-smime-0.
[X963] "Public-Key Cryptography for the Financial Services
Industry: Key Agreement and Key Transport Using Elliptic
Curve Cryptography", American National Standard
X9.63-2001, 2001.
Appendix: ASN.1 Module
CMSECDHAlgs-2017
{ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)
smime(16) modules(0) id-mod-cms-ecdh-alg-2017(TBD0) }
DEFINITIONS IMPLICIT TAGS ::=
BEGIN
-- EXPORTS ALL
IMPORTS
KeyWrapAlgorithm
FROM CryptographicMessageSyntaxAlgorithms-2009 -- in [CMSASN1]
{ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1)
pkcs-9(9) smime(16) modules(0) id-mod-cmsalg-2001-02(37) }
KEY-AGREE, SMIME-CAPS
FROM AlgorithmInformation-2009 -- in [CMSASN1]
{ iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)
security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0)
id-mod-algorithmInformation-02(58) }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha256kdf-scheme,
dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha384kdf-scheme,
dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha512kdf-scheme,
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha256kdf-scheme,
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha384kdf-scheme,
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha512kdf-scheme,
cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha256kdf-scheme,
cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha384kdf-scheme,
cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha512kdf-scheme
FROM CMSECCAlgs-2009-02 -- in [CMSECC]
{ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1)
pkcs-9(9) smime(16) modules(0)
id-mod-cms-ecc-alg-2009-02(46) }
;
--
-- Object Identifiers
--
smime-alg OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1)
pkcs-9(9) smime(16) alg(3) }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD1 }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD2 }
dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {
smime-alg TBD3 }
--
-- Extend the Key Agreement Algorithms in [CMSECC]
--
KeyAgreementAlgs KEY-AGREE ::= { ...,
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha256kdf-scheme |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha384kdf-scheme |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha512kdf-scheme |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme }
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme KEY-AGREE ::= {
IDENTIFIER dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme
PARAMS TYPE KeyWrapAlgorithm ARE required
UKM -- TYPE unencoded data -- ARE preferredPresent
SMIME-CAPS cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme }
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme KEY-AGREE ::= {
IDENTIFIER dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme
PARAMS TYPE KeyWrapAlgorithm ARE required
UKM -- TYPE unencoded data -- ARE preferredPresent
SMIME-CAPS cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme }
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme KEY-AGREE ::= {
IDENTIFIER dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme
PARAMS TYPE KeyWrapAlgorithm ARE required
UKM -- TYPE unencoded data -- ARE preferredPresent
SMIME-CAPS cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme }
--
-- Extend the S/MIME CAPS in [CMSECC]
--
SMimeCAPS SMIME-CAPS ::= { ...,
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha256kdf-scheme.&smimeCaps |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha384kdf-scheme.&smimeCaps |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-sha512kdf-scheme.&smimeCaps |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme.&smimeCaps |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme.&smimeCaps |
kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme.&smimeCaps }
cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme SMIME-CAPS ::= {
TYPE KeyWrapAlgorithm
IDENTIFIED BY dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha256-scheme }
cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme SMIME-CAPS ::= {
TYPE KeyWrapAlgorithm
IDENTIFIED BY dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha384-scheme}
cap-kaa-dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme SMIME-CAPS ::= {
TYPE KeyWrapAlgorithm
IDENTIFIED BY dhSinglePass-stdDH-hkdf-sha512-scheme }
END
Acknowledgements
Many thanks to Daniel Migault, Eric Rescorla, Jim Schaad, Stefan
Santesson, and Sean Turner for their review and insightful
suggestions.
Author's Address
Russ Housley
918 Spring Knoll Drive
Herndon, VA 20170
USA
housley@vigilsec.com